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Excitement over Annan move to hand over secret envelope

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By NATION Reporter and CorrespondentPosted Thursday, July 9 2009 at 20:28

The handing over of the Waki envelope to the International Criminal Court has attracted widespread support, with calls for the court to quickly start investigations.

Former UN secretary-general Kofi Annan, who was chief mediator in peace talks following an eruption of violence after disputed election results in 2007, handed over the envelope to International Criminal Court prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo yesterday despite the August deadline he had given the two principals.

Failed to act

MPs Johnstone Muthama (Kangundo) and Kambi Kazungu (Kaloleni) said the move was welcome as the government had failed to act in the past.

“The Hague is the best solution and a large number of MPs share this view. There is no guarantee that the same implementers of the law shall take action,” Mr Muthama said.

Mr Kazungu said Kenyans do not trust each other and the justice system. He said the government still had a chance to meet the ICC prosecutor’s September deadline for a local judicial process to try the suspects.

The International Centre for Policy and Conflict urged the ICC not to accept a watered down judicial process.

Its director, Mr Ndung’u Wainaina, said it was now up to the ICC to act swiftly and ensure impunity in Kenya is crushed by either forcing government to establish a credible, impartial and independent tribunal locally or intervene directly.

“This opportunity to confront impunity in Kenya must not be lost. We expect the government’s full co-operation with the ICC,” he said.

Mr Wainaina said he was not convinced the Grand Coalition had the will to promote accountability as the prime suspects had enormous influence.

But the Federation of Evangelical and Indigenous Christian Churches of Kenya rooted for a special tribunal, saying, justice will only be done if the accused are tried in Kenya.

The group’s spokesperson, Bishop Joseph Methu, said Kenya is not a failed state and its institutions were intact “but were restrained by the political elite... There should be serious commitment to the establishment of the local tribunal. The Hague should be the last resort,” he added.

ODM vice-chairman and Dujis MP Adan Duale said: “This is good news. We have been grappling with the issue for 18 months. We want the ICC to conduct independent and impartial investigations to bring the suspects to book.”

Out of the way

The assistant Livestock minister said Kenyans wanted the post-poll violence issue out of the way so they could go ahead and develop the country. He said a Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission must be set up to heal the nation.

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Add a comment (4 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by wahinya michael
    Posted July 12, 2009 01:13 AM

    the hague is the way.we have seen these goverment officials for the last over 30yrs since we were kids and upto now nothing can work out.They are corrupt,Judicial system is corrupt and money will change hands and the big fish will be free.Let them be taken to ICC and Kenya will have peace and hermony forever.

  2. Submitted by carolo
    Posted July 10, 2009 09:53 AM

    This church org has a misconstrued conception of what Kenyans want. Justice is justice as long as the criminals are tried. We don't care whether it is in Kenya, at the Hague, or in the suspended air, the victims need to get their day in court and that means the accused being tried, full stop. There is likely to be injustice done to the victims with a local tribunal being that it is restrained by the political elite (accused and their friends and family) as compared to ICC

  3. Submitted by Ibui
    Posted July 10, 2009 08:02 AM

    The local tribunal would actually be a great option, because this time around, Mr Okampo would be looking over their shoulder, while ICC would be on standby. It would not be bussiness as usual with the local tribunal, as all the small fish would now be netted.

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